May 2011 Archive Page 1

Are you on the freelance treadmill?

Treadmill

Ponder this quote from new media thought leader and business consultant Chris Brogan:

If we don’t pay close attention to how what we’re doing fits in with the rest of our life, then we might end up winning the wrong race.

When it comes to my work I’ll admit to thinking sometimes, just sometimes, that I’m running the wrong race.

Twitter, Facebook, blogging, ebooks, workshops, mentoring, writing, client meetings, feature articles. All these things are a part of my daily life. But sometimes they’re a drag.

Don’t get me wrong. I love my life as a freelance writer.

But the truth is, I want to write books that make a difference.

Writing, however, takes time. And I get so caught up in running the new media and “successful freelancer” race that instead of running in the open air on a tree-lined path, I get on a treadmill of keeping up with what a modern freelance “should” do.

That ends. Today.

I’m creating margin in my day to make that happen.

For me, it starts with tightening up my schedule and employing the “un-do” list:

  • No more “let’s catch up” coffee dates or lunches.
  • At least one full, uninterrupted day in the office (and preferably more).
  • A minimum daily words (or time) plan for the book.
  • Using a production schedule (essentially a spreadsheet) to chunk and manage my client work and freelance assignments.
  • Saying no to keeping up.

Ready to jump off the treadmill and onto the path? Tell me how you’re going to do it.

 

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12 true things no one tells you about freelance writing

Oh, sure, freelance writing can be hard and lonely, yet rewarding and exhilarating.

We all know that.

But here’s a list of all the other stuff nobody ’fesses up about.

If you’re a freelance writer you will:

  1. Threaten to give up the glamour-life and get a fulltime job no less than once every 30 days.
  2. Fantasize about screaming at/harming your clients.
  3. Lament your pathetic life early and often.
  4. Be wildly jealous of other writers and occasionally of the guy driving the trash truck.
  5. Google-stalk other writers to see if you can duplicate their life.
  6. Consider yourself the greatest writer that ever walked the face of the earth.
  7. Consider yourself the worst writer that ever walked the face of the earth.
  8. Be certain that someone plagiarized part of all of your work.
  9. Do a half-crap draft just to get something down on paper.
  10. Take a nap instead of work.
  11. Lose track of billable hours and have to eat the cost.
  12. Be unavailable to PITA clients the way Marcia Brady had “something suddenly come up” in the Brady Bunch episode called “The Subject Was Noses.”

Your turn:

  • C’mon, spill it. Post your confessions for all to see (and relate to).
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Misfit writers

I happened upon this post by accident after talking with a friend about my gravitation toward misfits of all kinds and then specifically Googling the words “misfit writers.”

Then, because I am a writer, I did the thing that a writer would do: I looked up the dictionary definition of “misfit.”

I didn’t like it.

I didn’t like it because the dictionary definition assigns blame to the person known as a misfit.

The blame, if there even is any, should not be on the person, but rather on the situation or environment. Read More

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Which writer are you: niche or diversified?

symmetry

Creative Commons License photo credit: alec.mills

Since this is The Diversified Writer blog, I thought it might be nice to talk a little bit more about diversification. When I first became a freelancer, I got a lot of helpful advice from others, mostly around the idea of settling into a niche.

I fought the idea of owning a niche and wasn’t sure why until a potential client said to me, “Oh, I get it. You specialize in being a generalist!”

Bingo!

My portfolio has print, interactive, long, short, feature, copy and other types of writing. I like writing lots of different things and, frankly, I think it makes me more valuable to my clients to have such a broad base of experience from which to draw.

Now, mind you, fellow writer Kim Stacey is highly specialized, choosing to focus solely on writing and consulting for funeral homes. Until I reached out to Kim online, I couldn’t even imagine there was a need for such a thing. But there is and it works for her.

Why? Read More

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4 ways to get more done

Moleskine + muji = power

Creative Commons License photo credit: alt1040

I’m on a productivity kick. Not just getting more done. But getting more of the right things done—faster and easier.

What about you? Are you on a productivity kick? Why? Why not? What stops you from getting more done?

For me, productivity suffers when I’m fearful, unfocused or just plain stuck.

When I was a kid, I was all of those things when it came to this one particular homework assignment.

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